It’s been a hard silence for the past 5 days since prisoners calling themselves Operation PUSH launched a statewide prisoner strike in the FL Department of Corrections prison system (FDOC or FDC) coinciding with Martin Luther King Day.

Information from prisoners is coming in at a much slower pace than people on the outside had anticipated, but reports are slowly and steadily making their way through the walls, despite many obstacles.

Thus far, we’ve heard from prisoners that there has been active participation or repression of some sort in at least 17 prisons: Santa Rosa, Jackson, Gulf, Hamilton, Avon Park, Franklin, Holmes, Everglades, Reception and Medical Center at Lake Butler, Liberty, Lowell, Columbia, Florida State Prison, Suwannee, Calhoun, Martin, and Taylor. (The list is growing by the day.)

A common theme among report backs is the attempt by the DOC to sever communication in order to create the perception of inactivity and break the spirits of those participating in the strike. Key contacts inside have reported being threatened by administration with harsher retaliation if correspondence with advocacy groups such as Fight Toxic Prisons and Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee continues.

According to prisoner reports, some facilities have shut off state phone service as of Tuesday, January 16. A Security Threat Group (STG) investigator employed at a prison in the panhandle confirmed that multiple prisons across the state were placed on lockdown in preparation for the strike. Shakedowns have occurred where independent means of communication were confiscated and their alleged owners/users were thrown in solitary confinement.

We’ve heard reports that widespread investigations are occurring for anyone who has received or sent mail to organizations offering support on the outside and certain individuals are being labelled a “security threat” for doing so. This can result in heightened custody levels, which means a loss of privileges, and continued harassment by the STG unit. One prisoner was told, “As long as you communicate with these people you’re always going to be labelled a security threat and you’re always going to be put under investigation.”

Given the past two years of prisoner organizing in Florida, it’s understandable that there is an expectation to hear of something distinct on the inside marking the start of the strike.

The movement on the inside of Florida’s prison system has become known for its moments of upheaval and crackdown, such as the unexpected uprising at Holmes CI on Sept 7, 2016, two days prior to the national wave of prisoner-led actions commemorating the Attica anniversary… followed by uprisings at 10 other facilities which had little-to-no known previous connection to outside support.

In most of those cases, the publicity about September 2016 surrounded a violent state repression that turned entire prison dorm units into battle zones. But what was gathered in prisoner correspondence months later was that most of the resistance began as quiet acts of non-cooperation among small groups.

The following year, surrounding a prisoner rights march in DC on Aug 19, the state extremely overreacted by placing all of its 97,000 prisoners on simultaneous lockdown, putting FL on the map once again.

Thus far, Operation PUSH has been something different. Its shown lessons learned on both sides of this war. (Yes, a war, still being fought ultimately between the people who want to continue slavery and the ones who want to end it.)

Operation PUSH did not call for rebellions in the prisons, which are relatively frequent occurrences in Florida. Though they are bold and courageous acts, those events have not been as effective in the communication of clear, specific demands such as PUSH has presented.

Operation PUSH repeatedly called for the slow and steady process of economic impact through non-participation. In response to this, the DOC appears to be using a different approach of low-intensity, psychological warfare rather than blunt force.

In the absence of news reports about brutal repression and destructive responses, and as a result of reduced communication access, we are left to wonder about details of what’s actually going on inside. Much of this may have to wait for firsthand accounts to surface via postal mail.

It should come as no surprise that the DOC can’t be trusted to report strikes occurring in Florida state prisons, just as they have been lying, or to borrow from a PUSH prisoner, “using wordplay,” around the rip-off of their canteen prices. They have been working for weeks to eliminate the chance of the strike’s success. Claiming that it never existed is another tactic for trying to stop it. Never trust the oppressors to adequately report the facts.

Beyond this, organizers on the outside have conducted public records requests indicating that the DOC has been monitoring dozens of organizations for months in an effort to undermine inside/outside alliances.

Clearly the DOC views our organizing as more than a minor inconvenience.

One drawback of having the build-up of public support grow for weeks on the outside is that it provided ample notification and time for the DOC to bribe, threaten and gather scab labor. Prisoners who aren’t engaged with the movement are able to replace participants in Operation PUSH and conduct the major operations needed to keep the slave camps running (food, cleaning, etc.)

This repression has made it hard to quantify participation, and word of the widespread support and solidarity actions are only now beginning to trickle in through news reports and letter writing events occurring all over the country.

Because Florida’s DOC practices such harsh retaliation against the people in its care and control, groups on the outside decided to deliver the prisoners’ demands.

Starting as early as New Year’s Eve, Operation PUSH solidarity protests across Florida have included demonstrations at the Gainesville Work Camp prison, a Miami parole office and The Lake Butler Reception/Medical Center prison, with hundreds of participants being seen and heard directly by thousands of prisoners and DOC employees at these facilities.

On Tuesday, January 16, a 5-hour takeover of the DOC lobby in Tallahassee occurred, demanding a meeting with DOC Secretary Julie Jones, which resulted in protestors being forcefully evicted from the building and an arrest in which a protestor is facing a bogus felony charge related to small amount of damaged property. The response to this protest by FDOC was similar to what we have come to expect: repression and deception. After attacking protestors in their lobby, they released a statement saying they were “battered” by PUSH supporters.

Despite the repression and lies, support for Operation PUSH is massively intensifying the public pressure on the DOC and that is an undeniable early victory of the movement five days into it. At the time of this writing, there are almost 150 organizations who have expressed explicit endorsement nationwide, contributing social media support, solidarity actions, letter-writing events and fundraising. There have already been over 40 stories in the news, including major national and international outlets.

What’s next?

Over coming weeks, organizers on the outside with IWOC and FTP will be gathering correspondence from the inside and releasing periodical updates, coupled with individualized support campaigns, as we have been doing over the past 2 years.

Several hundred strike support yard signs were printed for statewide distribution and a new phone zap campaign will be released shortly.

The DOC is pretending to ignore Operation PUSH by issuing meaningless statements and attempting to confuse people over canteen prices (citing the cost of a single soup, when prisoners’ statement referred to cost for a case.) Make no mistake. They are far from ignoring the strikers, and it is far from over.

January 15 in Florida was a major step in building up the movement to end prison slavery that is brewing on a national scale. It has sown seeds for the months ahead. Prisoners in Texas have already called for renewing the celebration of the Juneteenth abolitionist holiday and spreading it into prisons worldwide. We are considering Operation PUSH as important and necessary groundwork for making that successful.

In the meantime, keep in touch via SPARC, IWOC, and FTP.

Additional Notes:

* Florida’s Dept. of Corrections had gone by FDOC until last year. In attempt to dodge the negative association of the DOC, they began re-branding themselves at FDC.

* PUSH is not an acronym, as far as anyone on the outside has been told. It appears to be capitalized as an emphasis on action it implies, perhaps akin to the MOVE Organization.